Woo was a natural mother. Sisterhood did not appeal to her. Ordinarily she ignored the griffon ladies but, let one of them have a litter of pups, and Woo was all coax—begging to share.
Cooing to the side of the box, pleading for just one peep—presently her hand would steal over to touch a pup. The mother dog growled, snapped!
When the pups grew and the mother left the box more. Woo, watching her chance, crept in and drew the pups close, cuddling, crooning, gibbering, kissing as she kissed me or kissed herself in the mirror. When the mother dog returned Woo would not give the puppies up. The dog then would come whimpering to me for help. It was the same with the old yard cat’s kittens. Woo clutched them to her with ecstatic hugs, ignoring the spitting mother cat.
“It’s a shame,” I said, and went to Vancouver to talk with the keeper of the monkey house in Stanley Park.
Lizzie looked after my creatures and the furnace in my absence. I returned to meet a furious, purple-in-the-face Lizzie coming out of the basement, picking gobs of sopped bread out of her carefully arranged grey hair. Milk trickled down her cheek.
“Abominable brute!” she exploded. “I stooped to feed the furnace; she crept along the pipe and deliberately emptied her food cup into my hair!”
I offered soothing and appropriate apologies. “Won’t your little patients enjoy that,” I said.
“Huh! How did you get on in Vancouver?”
“The keeper says monkey-breeding in captivity is very risky; often the mother, the baby or both die.”
“Then don’t risk it, Milly; don’t! Let well enough alone.”
So Woo had to cramp her maternal affection into loving other creatures’ babies. She handled the pups and kittens so tenderly that the mothers gave up protesting, and Woo philosophically accepted adopting in place of bearing.
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